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Quincy Family, Youth & Technology For Lifestyle Change (FYT-4-LIFE) Study

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Pediatric Obesity
Interventions
Other: Physical Activity
Behavioral: Evidence-based information on healthy family routines
Registration Number
NCT02324361
Lead Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital
Brief Summary

To date, approaches that show the most promise for preventing and/or reversing the course of childhood obesity involve the delivery of intensive lifestyle interventions within a family-based context, emphasizing the necessity of parental involvement and making changes in family routines and the home environment. Considering that the current demand for pediatric weight management programs far exceed availability, as well as the high attrition rates observed in such programs, there is a great need for more accessible and efficient means of delivering these interventions to reduce the burden of childhood obesity.

The goal of this study is to understand whether text messaging and social media platforms can be leveraged to address the important issue of childhood obesity by engaging parent/guardians in one of these strategies, and whether these strategies produce similar outcomes. No existing study has compared these strategies head-to-head, and the investigators believe that this project will be instrumental in understanding the determinants of success in these strategies and allow us to collect sufficient intelligence to be able to deploy these meaningfully to patients as part of usual care.

Detailed Description

The goal of this pilot study is to evaluate and compare the feasibility and effectiveness of two platforms, text messaging and Facebook, for delivering an evidence-based, family-centric childhood obesity intervention to parent/guardians of children between the ages of 3-6 with a BMI of 90th percentile and above. The investigators hypothesize that the use of both platforms for delivering a childhood obesity intervention will help establish healthier family routines and be equally engaging and accepted by parent/guardians and children.

The primary aim of this study is to assess the effect of the intervention on:

* Parent/guardian knowledge of healthy family routines (i.e., nutrition, frequency of family meals, child's screen time, bedtime routines, physical activity, and sleep hours) and of parenting strategies that are preventive of child overweight and obesity

* Parent/guardian readiness, confidence, and perceived self-efficacy to make and maintain changes in family routines known to be associated with healthy weight outcomes

The secondary aims of the study are to assess the effect of the intervention on:

* The adoption of healthy family routines and parenting strategies that are preventive of child overweight and obesity

* Daily objective physical activity in the index child by accelerometry (using a physical activity tracking device)

* Index children's BMI percentile, using data collected during regular clinic visits from the electronic medical record

* To assess the level of engagement with the intervention, measured via daily activity tracker wear by the index child, parent/guardian views of Facebook posts or responses to 2-way text messages

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
48
Inclusion Criteria
  • Index child's BMI ≥90th percentile
  • Index child age between 3 and 7 years of age at time of enrollment in study
  • The child is under the care of a primary care provider at the Quincy Pediatric Associates practice
  • The family is not planning to move from the Greater Boston area during the study period

The participating parent/guardian:

  • Is 18 years or older
  • Is the primary caregiver for the child
  • Has regular access to the Internet
  • Has regular access to a personal computer with USB connection OR a smartphone with a mobile operating system that is compatible with the physical activity tracker
  • Owns a Facebook account AND a cellphone with text messaging capability and if choosing the text-messaging intervention, is willing to receive a maximum of 62 text messages/month for 3 months on their personal cellphone
  • Is fluent in English (spoken and written)
Exclusion Criteria
  • Children who are diagnosed with underlying medical or pharmacologic factors that may contribute to obesity and/or affect participation in physical activity
  • Significant medical or psychiatric co-morbidities in the participating parent/guardian
  • Visual, hearing, or cognitive impairments in the participating parent/guardian
  • Index child or parent/guardian currently enrolled in another weight control program
  • Children who have a sibling already enrolled in the study

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Text messagingEvidence-based information on healthy family routinesThe intervention consists of evidence-based information on healthy family routines and parenting strategies adapted for 140-character text messages. The automated text-messaging algorithm consists of the delivery of two types of text messages: 1-way messages, in which participating parents/guardians will receive a piece of education or motivation on the dimension topic that they're being coached on and 2-way messages, in which participants are able to respond to an educational message containing a number response prompt that will provide them with personalized feedback regarding a dimension they are being coached on. All index children will be provided with a Physical Activity Monitor to wear during waking hours for the duration of the study.
Facebook groupPhysical ActivityThe intervention consists of evidence-based information on healthy family routines and parenting strategies adapted for Facebook posts on a private study Facebook group. Participating parents/guardians will have access to all features of the secret study Facebook group (e.g., create and view postings, comment and like existing posts and view user names of other members of the group (existing study participants and staff) for the duration of the study. All index children will be provided with a Physical Activity Monitor to wear during waking hours for the duration of the study.
Text messagingPhysical ActivityThe intervention consists of evidence-based information on healthy family routines and parenting strategies adapted for 140-character text messages. The automated text-messaging algorithm consists of the delivery of two types of text messages: 1-way messages, in which participating parents/guardians will receive a piece of education or motivation on the dimension topic that they're being coached on and 2-way messages, in which participants are able to respond to an educational message containing a number response prompt that will provide them with personalized feedback regarding a dimension they are being coached on. All index children will be provided with a Physical Activity Monitor to wear during waking hours for the duration of the study.
Facebook groupEvidence-based information on healthy family routinesThe intervention consists of evidence-based information on healthy family routines and parenting strategies adapted for Facebook posts on a private study Facebook group. Participating parents/guardians will have access to all features of the secret study Facebook group (e.g., create and view postings, comment and like existing posts and view user names of other members of the group (existing study participants and staff) for the duration of the study. All index children will be provided with a Physical Activity Monitor to wear during waking hours for the duration of the study.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Parent/Guardian Knowledge of Healthy Family Routines and of Parenting Strategies That Are Preventive of Child Overweight and Obesity90 days

We designed a scale for use in this study containing 8 questions on each of the family routines that we assessed (i.e., nutrition, frequency of family meals, child's screen time, bedtime routines, physical activity, and sleep hours). Each of the eight questions were assigned one point value. The scale was summative such that the lowest possible score was 0 and highest possible score was 8, from adding up scores to all eight questions. Higher scores indicated a better outcome.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Sleep90 days

Baseline to 90-days post-intervention change in child sleep duration (hours per day)

Change in Child Screen Time Exposure90 days

Baseline to 90-days post-intervention change in child screen time exposure (hours per day)

Change in Sugar Sweetened Beverage Intake90 days

Baseline to 90-days post-intervention change in child sugar sweetened beverage intake (servings per day)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Quincy Pediatric Associates

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Quincy, Massachusetts, United States

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